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Chinese couples divorcing to avoid property tax

China's central government last Friday issued rules to rein in housing prices, including a nationwide capital gains tax of 20 per cent on profits owners make from selling residential property.

AFP: Peter Parks

Chinese couples are flocking to divorce to avoid a new property sales tax imposed by the government, after it left open a loophole for those who end their marriages.

China's central government last Friday issued rules to rein in housing prices, including a nationwide capital gains tax of 20 per cent on profits owners make from selling residential property.

But the terms allow couples with two properties who divorce and put each house into one person's name to then sell them tax-free under certain conditions, after which they can remarry, state media said.

Government marriage registration offices, which also handle divorces, have been swamped by scores of couples trying to untie the knot.

Those divorcing included at least one pregnant woman, the Shanghai Daily said.

"She told me she came here to avoid the possible loss in a property transaction, and I could say nothing," the newspaper quoted an official saying at another registry in the city, which had seen divorces double.

"I told all of them to come here again for remarriage registration."

The southern metropolis of Guangzhou, north-eastern city of Harbin and Ningbo in eastern China have also reported rising divorce rates after the tax was announced.

Sample calculations they cited showed the move could save a couple tens of thousands of dollars in tax.

"They (couples) appear to be in good moods... more than half said frankly that they wanted a divorce for the sake of property," an official was quoted as saying by the Ningbo Daily Newspaper Group website.

An exemption for the tax - which was previously only an option available to local governments, many of which did not impose it - is available for vendors who are selling their main home and have owned it for more than five years.

The Shanghai Civil Affairs Bureau confirmed the planned tax had triggered a divorce boom, but declined to give a total for the city.

Couples were reportedly citing "lack of mutual affection" as the reason to separate.

Divorce in China is typically handled by government offices and not through the court system, and if the two parties agree it is a simple and straightforward procedure.

An official cautioned wives to beware, however, warning that some unfaithful men might actually want a permanent divorce.

Failed marriages are on the rise in China with around 2.87 million couples divorcing in 2011, up 7.3 per cent from 2010, the latest government figures showed.

"Some men might trick their wives into getting a divorce using the tax as an excuse," He Zhanbiao of Shanghai's civil affairs bureau told the Shanghai Daily.

"But they might have a mistress and truly want a divorce."

Three years ago another set of rules introduced to control the property market, including limits on buying second homes, also sparked a trend of snap divorces so that both members of a couple could own a property.

Housing costs have recently rebounded, prompting the government to intervene again.